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Florida governor Rick Scott is making headlines for canceling the state's high-speed train project, but in another, less-noticed move he may be derailing protections for long-term care residents by firing their chief advocate in the state. The decision, an apparent capitulation to the wishes of the long-term care industry, has alarmed resident advocates, who fear a decline in their ability to protect the institutionalized elderly from substandard care and abuse.

"We are very concerned that the governor of Florida has yielded to industry demands to dismiss an effective advocate for residents in a state that so many elderly Americans choose as their retirement home," said Sarah F. Wells, executive director of the National Consumer Voice for Quality Long-Term Care, in a press release.

The ousted advocate, Brian Lee, was director of the Florida Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program, a position he had held for seven years. Every state is required to have an ombudsman program that serves as an independent voice for residents -- addressing resident complaints and advocating for improvements in the long-term care system. Florida is perhaps unique in the nation in that all of its 300 ombudsmen are volunteers, not paid employees. The volunteers make annual inspections of licensed long-term care facilities and try to resolve problems.

"The ombudsman's role is to focus very narrowly on the representation of the residents," Hank Stevens, a volunteer ombudsman in Broward County, told ElderLawAnswers. "These vulnerable citizens have no lobbyists, trade council, or collectively, any representation -- except for what the volunteer ombudsmen provide. In the process of doing that, I suspect that we are, at best, a bit of a frustration for the long-term care industry."

By all accounts the volunteers' leader, Brian Lee, was a passionate champion of the elderly, but one who crossed swords with the long-term care industry more than once. Immediately prior to his removal he had requested that the state's 677 nursing homes make public the names of their owners and operators, something that is required under the new federal health care law. Earlier, he had asked owners to demonstrate they had enough food and water set aside for residents in case of an emergency like a hurricane.

When Republican Rick Scott won the governorship, the Florida Assisted Living Association sent him a letter recommending that Lee be replaced with someone friendlier to their industry. Scott seems to have listened, although Lee was given no explanation for his removal, according to the Miami Herald. (Governor Scott's office has not responded to ElderLawAnswers' request for comment.)

In the weeks prior to Lee's firing, his army of volunteer ombudsmen worked hard to save his job. The heads of all 17 of the district offices in the state ombudsman program signed a letter to the governor calling Lee "the guiding light of the program. He has transformed the program's culture from one that was regulatory-focused to one that is now resident-centered, doing what is right for some of Florida's frailest citizens."

Fears That Oversight Will Be Compromised

Advocates in the state are worried that Lee's removal signals the start of a weakening in the ombudsman's role in protecting elderly residents of long-term care facilities.

"There is concern that members of the industry have a very strong lobby and would like to do away with many of the ombudsman's capabilities, especially the inspections of the nursing homes," said Linda Stevens, Hank Stevens's wife and also a volunteer ombudsman in Broward County. "I think politically the firing of Brian Lee is to move in the direction of lessening our capabilities to advocate for these residents."

Lee, 39, is quoted in the Sarasota Herald-Tribune as saying he was proud to have renewed the ombudsman program's focus on resident rights during his tenure.

"I'm very glad I never compromised my principles or those of the program," Lee said.

The volunteers are now reaching out to lawmakers in the state to try to win back Lee's job.